[18+] Come Undone [2010 – Free Download] English 400 MB DVD-RIP SQ

DVD RIP, EIGHTEEN +, HOLLYWOODOn July 7, 2014

126 Min | Drama | April 2010

IMDB Rating: 6.2

Director: Silvio Soldini

Starring: Alba Rohrwacher, Pierfrancesco Favino, Teresa Saponangelo

Come Undone Review: COME UNDONE (‘Cosa voglio di piu’, the Italian title means ‘What More Do I Want’) is a very slight film by the well respected director Silvio Soldini (‘Bread and Tulips’, ‘Days and Clouds’, etc), a story that seems to get mired in its own passion, unable to transmit a story line that will keep the audience’s attention. Perhaps this is due to the ‘too many cooks spoil the broth’ concept, in addition to Soldini the story and screenplay were nursed by Doriana Leondeff, and Angelo Carbone. In Come Undone, the cast is a strong one but the actors are just not given much to develop, leaving the audience with the repeated question ‘what if?’

In Come Undone, Anna (Alba Rohrwacher) is an accountant for an important insurance firm and lives with her longterm lover Alessio (Giuseppe Battiston) – a man who longs fro a stable longterm relationship with children, a home, etc. Anna, feeling as though the fire has fizzled in that relationship and takes up with co-worker Domenico (Pierfrancesco Favino) and the two begin a passionate affair. Now it is Anna who is considering a longterm relationship but is thwarted by the fact that Domenico is married to Miriam (Teresa Saponangelo) and has children and doesn’t want to leave his wife, instead preferring passionate occasional intervals with Anna in tacky motels. It becomes a struggle of human nature – which is preferable, a stable home life or intermittent moments of passion?

The actors give ‘Come Undone’ their all and the encounters between Anna and Domenico are incredibly sensuous. The problem lies with the story’s lack of resolution or even momentum, it gets stuck in the process of offering a solution for the lovers. It is simply not up to the same standards as Soldini’s other works – but those are fairly high standards to reach. Given the film’s few flaws it is still a beautiful visual experience.